Sherwood Eliot Wirt always rated high on
my list of People to Be Watched. He is unpredictable, can believe six impossible
things before breakfast, and gets away with audacious utterances. I was
intrigued, then, when he told me about this book. Could we entrust Billy
Graham to him?

We could, as it happened. Dr. Graham was in safe
hands. His approach throughout resembles that of one Scottish Covenanter
who said of a colleague, "I could never get my love off that man. I think
Jesus Christ has something to do with him."

Right at the outset Dr. Wirt points out that Billy
Graham is in human terms inexplicable  much more than the sum of his
parts. Wirt promises to tell readers things about the evangelist they may
have missed, and he does just that. Here are unique insights and little asides
from seventeen years of company-keeping and shared ministry at home and abroad,
supplemented from the continuing friendship since Wirt's retirement as editor
of Decision two decades ago.

In this project he necessarily selective, averaging
four pages for each year of a crowded and eventful life and presenting his
observations with infectious enthusiasm. He properly gives credit to the
significant

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and sacrificial contributions made to the Billy Graham Evangelistic
Association by team families and by staff members. When he dons his journalistic
hat, I sense Wirt's "sheer hopeless veracity" (I owe the phrase to Jerome
K. Jerome). As an observer on the sidelines of some of the events he mentions,
I hail him as a faithful scribe.

I enjoyed reading this book. It displays generally
the whimsical eccentricity so well known to those who have benefited from
his fellowship over the years. He reminds me of that character in The
Little World of Don Camillo who said, "I was absurd from the very beginning.
Thanks be to God." I mean that in the nicest possible way.